Title: Learning Science through Collaborative Visualization over the Internet
1Learning Science through Collaborative
Visualization over the Internet
- Roy Pea
- Stanford University
- Stanford Center for Innovations in Learning
- Nobel Symposium Virtual Museums 2002
2Collaborative Visualization
- Development of scientific knowledge
- Mediated by using scientific visualization and
CSCW tools - In a collaborative context
- Supported by constructivist pedagogy.
3What was the CoVis Project?
- A wideband network that formed a distributed
learning environment for reform-oriented science
education by developing a culture of science
practice, including - Integrated suite of tools for network-based
project-enhanced science learning - Internet direct to 5-6 desktops per classroom,
and all students with individual accounts - Scientific visualization and inquiry tools--focus
on earth and atmospheric sciences - Collaborative media spaces Collaboratory
Notebook, communication, and video-conferencing
with screen sharing - Project-oriented pedagogy and services
- Learning activities/web services for interschool
collaborations - Continuing professional development for teachers,
with a focus on project-oriented pedagogy - Mentor database services for involving scientists
4But this was 1992 and there were no web browsers!
When the grant proposal was written in 1991,
Internet-based videoconferencing was only
possible with a 40,000 hardware codec.
Scientific visualization was not seen in the K-12
classroom.
5Learning through Collaborative Visualization
- The vision was to establish a prototype of a
future distributed multimedia learning
environment for science that would integrate
distributed expertise including educators,
learning researchers, scientists at universities,
and a science education museum.
6CoVis Guiding Principles
- Learn science by doing science
- Invite and nurture open-ended questions
- Foster refinements of questions in reflective
discussions - Secure respect and value for the diversity of
learners questions - Provide multiple representations as diverse and
flexible means for asking and answering questions
- Teach inquiry by modeling inquiry
- Support progress in learning by seeding it with
the use of powerful ideas - Reflect these principles in the assessment of
student activities
7Use scenario Global warming studies
- First, staging activities guide learning about
greenhouse effect, greenhouse gases, and
variation in seasonal climate patterns using
learner-centered scientific visualization tools
and the same NASA and NOAA datasets used by the
scientific community. - Then, student teams collaborate across schools
over the Internet on projects following questions
of their interest. - The 8-week cycle ends when they present findings
at a global summit where diverse national or
ideological perspectives are represented.
8Distributed Learning Communities
9Where did we start? With a vision and some
partners...
10Perspective on technologies for learning
- Historically, new representational systems
provide cognitive power and have social
consequences (e.g., writing, algebra, graphing,
computer models) - Distributed intelligence supports activity in
human-technology systems. - Cognitive technologies to see, design, build,
whats more difficult, error-prone, impossible
without them. - Social technologies Enable collective activity
such as collaborations, cooperations, more
difficult without them. - Technologies often change the problems that it is
possible to pose, not only to solve - Leads to re-structuring of what it means to know
and understand in a discipline (and hence
learning)
11Perspective on science education reform
- View of science in terms of communities of
practice, sharing values and norms, language,
tools, practices - Constructivist conception of science learning
as building on a learners prior belief systems - Promoting science learning as guided inquiry in
practices akin to scientific ones, using similar
tools - That science is a social practice is compatible
with science being nonetheless about a material
world
Internet
12Changing the processes of learning
- Beyond traditional distance learning (talking
heads) - Goal was to create highly-interactive learning
environments that reproduce or exceed
face-to-face - Distributed learning communities
- Shared media spaces for collaborative learning
- Interschool projects mediated by groupware,
web-based resources and scientific visualization - Telementoring and teleapprenticeships
- Virtual fieldtrips to museums and research labs
13Components of the CoVis Testbed in 1992-93
- Hybrid high-speed public-access network for data
services and desktop videoconferencing - Scientific visualization tools (Climate
Visualizer, Weather Visualizer) - Collaboration support (Collaboratory Notebook)
- Integrated email, FTP, Gopher
- 1993 summer teacher workshop (Internet, project
science, visualization, collaboration tools) - Few learning activities (teachers suggested that
they would build them around resources and tools)
141992-94...CoVis Community Proof of concept
15Benefits of Scientific Visualization
- Scientific visualization an image rendered
through high-speed computer graphics that is
based on a numerical data set that describes some
quantity in the world (e.g., global
temperatures). - Uses visual reasoning to understand science
- Provides big picture view of complex systems
- Can connect students to scientific communities by
allowing access to existing and used data sets - Acts as conversational props for learning
discussions - Provides resources for inquiries in student
projects
16Scientists Visualization Tools
17From Scientists Workbench to Learner-Centered
Scientific Visualization Applications (1993)
- Climate Visualizer
- NMC Archival data providing twenty-five years of
twice daily measurements of temperature, winds,
and pressure at several levels of the atmosphere.
Coverage over most of the Northern Hemisphere. - Weather Visualizer
- Real time hourly data providing custom weather
maps including temperature, dew point, fronts,
severe weather warnings and weather station
reports. Coverage over contiguous United States
and Canada.
18CoVis Collaboratory Notebook (1993)
- ...was a shared, networked hypermedia database
- ...was a place where students, teachers, and
scientist mentors... - Record thoughts, plans, and actions
- Respond to the work of others
- Are scaffolded in steps of project inquiry and
collaboration - ...in the course of open-ended scientific inquiry
19What did we learn from practice?
20First year testbed woes (1993)
- Learners inquiry questions often went beyond
available visualization datasets - Learners and teachers needed more support, and
scheduled events to motivate scientific
visualizer use in projects - Few cross-school project teams emerged
- Lack of fit of videoconferencing to common
education tasks, despite early teacher excitement - Needed regular access to Collaboratory Notebook
to warrant integral use in projects - Transitioning to project pedagogy presented many
challenges to teachers and learners
21Redesign Tools and Activities (93-94)
- Added more learner support in tool and activity
wraparounds for scientific visualizers - Piloted scheduled on-line events to encourage
cross-school projects and pedagogy (CIAs) - Planning for a Greenhouse Effect Visualizer as
new domain for inquiry projects - Set-up out-of-classroom computers to increase
Internet access for collaboration and
communication - To motivate adoption, we tried desktop video for
remote classroom support of teachers
22Observations and CoVis Redesign (94-95)
- Assessment Teachers sought project assessment
rubrics, and established clearer expectations for
students on work process and products - Mentors More ready access to mentors to help
scope student projects, and identify data for
investigating students questions (explored a
mentor database) - Models More curriculum activities and datasets
around which students questions could be
developed (explore web-based resources and
activities) - Domains New Greenhouse Effect Visualizer into
use - Archival global data of monthly means for a year
providing surface temperature, incoming sunlight,
albedo (reflectivity), energy absorbed and
emitted by the earth, and measurement of
greenhouse effect
23New Challenges for Summer 1995
- National Science Foundation asks for national
scale-up of CoVis from AAT (92-94) to NIE
(95-97) program - What scaling issues are involved in making CoVis
innovations broadly available to many more and
far more diverse schools? - What do we find to be needed in software,
network, activity design and teacher support? - OR How does the system of distributed
intelligence in support of science learning need
to be redesigned to fit these new challenges?
24Scaleup Changes in CoVis Classrooms (From 1992-94
to 1995-1997)
- 2 high schools using 12 computers --gt 42 middle
and high schools 1000 computers (56KB to T-1
level Internet connections) - Size and diversity of learner community
270--gt5000 students, 80 white --gt 47 white, 34
African American, 14 Latino, 5 Asian - Broader geographic and economic diversity
- Many low-income urban schools, e.g., 11 in
Chicago Jersey City Patterson - Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, South
- Teacher community from 6 to 100 teachers, plus
40 tech coordinators, 100s of scientist
telementors
25Challenges in scaling CoVis (1995-97)
- Experimental, hand-supported reforms gt
institutionalized, sustainable ones with local
ownership - Demonstration activities using new tools gt
repeatable, curriculum-based activity structures - Local, informal face-to-face development
activities for 6 teachers gt formal workshops,
print materials, on-line support of 100 teachers
in 13 states working with over 5000 students - CoVis staff technical support for 2 local high
schools gt training and remote support of on-site
tech personnel for 42 middle and high schools - Proprietary software gt web-based open system
standards - Informal use of mentors gt on-line mentor database
26What did we re-design in response to these
challenges?
- GeoSciences Web server for guiding new classrooms
into the CoVis community - Workshops for teachers and school tech support
staff (summer, on-line, targetted face to face) - Web-based software distribution and ongoing
teacher support system - Scaled project collaboration support
- Collaboratory Notebook for thousands of users
- CU-See Me desktop videoconferencing
27- Design team partners from Northwestern, U.Col.,
U.Mich., UIUC, U.Chicago, UniData, NCAR (late
1994-early 1995) - Professional development resources on learning
perspectives, doing projects, mentoring,
visualization, collaboration - CoVis Activities and Projects -- to provide a
range of scheduled learning activities from which
students can evolve projects, and teachers
develop and share new designs - CoVis Resources -- visualization tools and data,
Virtual Field Trips, Interactive Weather
Briefings - CoVis Teacher Lounge -- information and materials
teachers need to conduct project-based science
and participate in CoVis, including links to
tools, activities, assessment rubrics, mentors,
and listservs - CoVis Student Lounge -- information and materials
students need to do project-based science and
participate in CoVis
28CoVis Interschool Activities (CIAs)
- Scheduled project cycles running 2-5 weeks, with
interschool matchmaking brokered by CoVis staff - CIAs provide opportunities for network
collaboration, mentoring, Exploratorium
Topic-Based Virtual Field Trips. - Land Use Management Planning (2 weeks)
- Soil Science (3 weeks)
- Weather Prediction, inc. UIUC Interactive Weather
Briefings (4 weeks), web-based Weather Visualizer - Global Warming (5 weeks)
- Teachers evaluated each CIA after use, and we
improved resources and activity support for each
next iteration.
29CoVis-UIUC Weather Visualizerhttp//storm.atmos.u
iuc.edu/covis2/visualizer/
75,000 Hits Per Day (in 1997)
30(No Transcript)
31UIUC/CoVis Online Guide to Meteorology
http//covis1.atmos.uiuc.edu/guide/guide.html
70,000 Hits Per Day to Just-in-time Learning
Modules (in 1997)
32Online Guide to Meteorology http//covis1.atmos.u
iuc.edu/guide/guide.html
33The CoVis Greenhouse Effect Visualizer (web-based)
34Visualization window from ClimateWatcher
displaying surface temperature for January 1987
35Exploratorium ExploraNet (http//www.exploratoriu
m.edu/)
100,000 Hits Per Day (in 1997)
36CoVis Mentor Database (verified registry,
checkin/out, email router)
37What changed with CoVis scaling and diversity
from 1992-94 to 1995-97?
- Mainly integrating technology and social support
roles in our redesigns - Transformations in how we viewed our roles
- From central invention, building, guiding gt To
brokering partners, coordinating events,
supporting a decentralized community with diverse
needs - From providing teachers with resources for
project science (tools, datasets) gt To providing
reform seeds and services that vary widely
across settings as each teacher re-invents the
CoVis Project
38Emerging challenges with scaling in diverse
schools (1996-97)
- Urban schools set up labs with unpredictable
access (to simplify their security needs) - Low levels of tech support,under-budgeted teacher
training - Shifting leaders and goals make commitments to
project reforms and technology difficult - Gaps between present teaching practice
project-centered learning -- Need on-line and
on-site support, models and guidance for doing
projects - Urban students had far less home computing
experience or access and report less efficacy
with computers (compared to their suburban peers)
39CoVis Teachers Learning Together
40Some Lessons Learned in the CoVis Project
- Innovative computing and communications tools
make possible forms of learning and teaching
exciting for kids and teachers (real-time data,
visualizations, telementoring, virtual field
trips, student-scientist partnerships) - Loosely coupled technological tools and
activities are insufficient to shape classroom
reform and change. Whats better? - Scheduled CoVis Inter-school Activities (CIAs),
such as the Global Warming Summit - Teachers are often eager for reform changes in
classroom activities, but it is very hard to
produce it by themselves -- brokering and
coordination are critical roles - Not all tools developed for the office workplace
fit well with classroom practices (e.g.,
videoconferencing)
41Developments from 1997-2002
- Establishment of NSF Center for Learning
Technologies in Urban Schools and scaling of
CoVis throughout urban schools in Chicago and
Detroit using new generations of WorldWatcher and
curriculum activities
42LeTUS
- Nearly 100 schools throughout the Chicago and
Detroit areas are using LeTUS science curricula,
including new elaborated versions of the pilot
curricula developed in the CoVis Project, and new
versions of the WorldWatcher software. - These city school districts recognize the
potential of inquiry-driven, technology-rich
science education, and have committed resources
to developing the means to support it. They are
changing the way science is taught in their
schools. And they are paving the way for systemic
educational reform. - LeTUS also emphasizes curriculum implementation
and revision, and teacher professional
development Local teachers and university
researchers collaborate in the design and
revision of curricula so that local teachers
become the catalysts for change.
43WorldWatcher Animation Incoming solar energy for
a year
44Continuing Challenges for Project-Based Learning
Environments
- Supporting diversity effectively Different
components of readiness for wide-scale
technology-supported educational reforms in
science instruction - Administrative support for continuing teacher
development - Perspective on curriculum, pedagogy, assessment
- Technology support for reform pedagogy
- Networking and computing infrastructure
- Engaging the scientific community in precollege
education - Sustainability of tools and services
- Issues of access and equity in K-12 technology
use, and home-school-community connectivity
45DISCUSSION